DC Citizen Science Water Quality Monitoring Report 2 0 2 0 Table of Contents Dear Friends of the River

DC Citizen Science Water Quality Monitoring Report 2 0 2 0 Table of Contents Dear Friends of the River

WAter DC Citizen Science Water Quality Monitoring Report 2 0 2 0 Table of Contents Dear Friends of the River, On behalf of Anacostia Riverkeeper, I am pleased to share with you our first Annual DC Citizen Science Volunteer Water Quality Report on Bacteria in District Waters. This report focuses on 2020 water quality results from all three District watersheds: the Anacostia River, Potomac River, and Rock Creek. The water quality data we collected is critical for understanding the health of the Anacostia River and District waters; as it serves as a gauge for safe recreation potential as well as a continuing assessment of efforts in the Methodology District of Columbia to improve the overall health of 7 our streams and waterways. As a volunteer program, we are dependent on those who offer time out of their daily schedule to work 8 Anacostia River with us and care for the water quality. With extreme gratitude, we would like to thank all our volunteers and staff for the dedication, professionalism, and enthusiasm to execute this program and to provide high quality data to the public. Additionally, support 10 Potomac River from our partner organizations was crucial to running this program, so we would like to extend an additional thanks to staff at Audubon Naturalist Society, Potomac Riverkeeper, and Rock Creek 12 Rock Creek Conservancy. We hope you find this annual report a good guide to learning more about our local DC waterways. We believe that clean water is a benefit everyone should experience, one that starts with consistent and 14 Discussion publicly available water quality data. Thank you for making this program possible, Appendix Suzy Kelly Founding Board Member, Anacostia Riverkeeper Executive Summary Established at the confluence of Rock Creek and the Anacostia and Potomac Rivers, the District of Columbia has long been a city impacted by water. From the original Piscataway First Nation inhabitants through the industrial revolution to modern day, the District’s local water bodies have been a magnetic force for industry, commerce, and the growth of the nation’s capital. Unfortunately, with a growing urban environment comes the associated environmental issues like stormwater pollution, sewage overflows, and increased flooding. Because of these issues, the water quality of the District’s surface waters, as it relates to ecological and human health, has been a consistent area of research and concern, not only for District residents but also for the health of the greater Chesapeake Bay population. While water recreation draws people from in and around the District, swimming in local waters has been illegal since the 1970s due to poor water quality which, at times, can pose a risk to human health. Anacostia Riverkeeper and our partners believe that clean water is a basic human right, one that Overview includes unimpeded and safe access to water for all who seek it. A swimmable Anacostia River is a primary goal of our organization, one that is mirrored by our partners in the Rock Creek and Potomac watersheds—Audubon Naturalist Society, Potomac Riverkeeper Network, and Rock Creek Conservancy. However, we understand that a swimmable Anacostia, Potomac, or Rock Creek cannot be achieved until water quality issues are addressed and the safety of those we would encourage to enjoy those waters is assured. In the past, there has been a lack of publicly available water volunteers from all quality data for DC waters. To address this issue, in 2018 the District Department of Energy and Environment (DOEE) 8 awarded a grant (RFA 2018-1805-WQD-VWQM) to Anacostia Wards Riverkeeper to develop a volunteer-based program to monitor 1,000+ 150+ the bacteria levels, specificallyEscherichia coli (E. coli) and samples collected voluteer’s fecal coliform, in District of Columbia surface waters. The first to date trained to date of its kind in the District, this project uses trained community scientists to collect water quality samples from 22 sites, in all three watersheds, across the District of Columbia every week during the prime recreating season (May to September). The goal of this volunteer monitoring program is to provide valuable and accessible water quality data for residents and visitors, so they can make informed decisions before recreating in District waters. This year, due to the outbreak of coronavirus (COVID-19), Anacostia Riverkeeper and partners had to rethink volunteer science in a world with limited face-to-face interaction. To train new volunteers and retrain volunteers from 2019, six virtual volunteer trainings were held. Thirty-plus new volunteers were trained, making a total of 150-plus volunteers trained to date for our DC citizen science program. Between April 29 and September 15, 2020, Anacostia Riverkeeper, partners, and volunteers collected a total of 462 water quality samples over 20 weeks of monitoring, bringing the total number of project samples collected during 2 years of this project to well over 1,000. - 3 - As discussed on the following pages of this report, the following trends were identified in 2020 over 20 weeks of monitoring in the Anacostia River, Potomac River, and Rock Creek in DC: • Recreational water quality along the Anacostia was mixed from 2019 to 2020 as the average single- sample passing rate for E. coli fell from 61% to 59% but the average geometric mean passing rate increased from 34% to 41%, indicating an improvement in overall recreational water quality. • Potomac recreational water quality showed minor change from year-to-year as the single-day passing rate for E. coli dipped from 74% to 63%. Geometric mean passing rates for E. coli remained mostly unchanged from 2019 to 2020, falling slightly from 49% to 48%. • Rock Creek recreational water quality showed mixed results from year-to-year, as the single-day passing rate for E. coli fell from 44% to 38%, but the geometric mean passing rate increased significantly from 0.8% to 4%. The Rock Creek watershed consistently shows the lowest passing rates of the three watersheds. • Turbidity levels for each watershed exhibited virtually no change as median turbidity values for each watershed were all below 12 NTU and varied by less than 2 NTU from 2019 to 2020. • Surface water alkalinity was virtually unchanged with median pH varying by less than 0.5 between watersheds from 2019 to 2020. Average pH values remained between 6.5 and 7.5 for each watershed. • Average air and water temperatures appear to correlate strongly with less developed forested land and lower temperatures. Rock Creek and its surrounding park had the lowest average air and water temperatures with the more developed Anacostia sites having the highest. • COVID-19 changed the type of recreation observed in 2020. There was an increase in individual and small group activities (e.g., fishing, kayaking, contact with water for hiking) vs large group activities. A side-effect of mass public infrastructure closures/lockdowns and decreased access to publicly available pools. Local rainfall totals and stormwater runoff seem to be the primary driving mechanisms for higher bacteria levels in District waters. Fortunately, the effect of these events are projected to diminish in the coming years due to the impact of local infrastructure projects (i.e., DC Water’s Clean Rivers Project) and stormwater reduction programs (i.e., DOEE’s RiverSmart Homes) drastically decreasing the amount of sewage and stormwater entering our surface waters each year. With further funding from DOEE, Anacostia Riverkeeper and our partners will continue our program into year three in the summer of 2021. It is our goal to not only train more volunteer scientists and engage more community members in this project, but to ultimately build a force of river stewards for the District’s waters. - 4 - Introduction Background Washington, D.C. truly is a city influenced by water. From the In the District, as well as most cities, the solution to this canals that used to flow past the Capitol, to the waterfront was to install combined sewer overflow (CSO) points along communities like Anacostia and Georgetown, surface water primary waterbodies that could be opened in the event of a in the District has long been a source of recreation and large storm to “overflow” the excess stormwater and sewage enjoyment for the city’s many residents and visitors. Across mixture with the thought that the river or stream would filter its 69 mi2 land area, 39 miles of surface water run through the it from the city over time. This brought untold amounts of District, all eventually flowing into the Potomac River estuary. pollution and raw sewage to District waters, increasing its These 39 river miles in the District don’t just bring enjoyment bacterial loads to the point that the water was hazardous to the communities they surround, but can also unintentionally for human or animal contact at times. By the late 2010s, an serve as vectors for pollution and environmental contaminants average of 2 billion gallons of overflow was entering the to move throughout the city. With a resident population of Anacostia mainstem alone, making it the largest receiver of over 700,000, and millions of tourists converging on the combined sewer of all three watersheds. Currently, around District each year, the health of the city’s surface waters are one-third (12,478 acres) of the District is still served by the of the upmost concern not just for aquatic organisms, but for combined sewer system, with the other two-thirds being those who wish to recreate on or around these waters as well. served by the more modern municipal separate storm sewer system (MS4). While recreation along the District’s surface waters is widely encouraged, swimming has been illegal in DC waters since the 1970s.

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